Brownwood Bulletin from Brownwood, Texas · Page 6

OBSTACLES Electric Auto Is for Real f AP Btrslfiess YOftK (AP) While fftosl Americans will be In- tfdhced tomorrow as the astro- muls rocket through space, Stores a? Scientists will be working quietly an the less glamor- 611s job of moving earthlings 81 48 Wiles an hour. These are the men who are trying 16 perfect an electric au- t&mobne, the development or Which seems to be stalled for tfie rhorneni but which could re- SUlt in a startling breakthrough. is the electric car for real? Afck the researchers for the big erefctric product manufacturers lihd you realize it. is surprisingly real. And you gel the same answer from the Big Three automakers too. Tn? Stale of the aft is really j more advanced than most 1 Americans seem to realize. And ! the implications, too, an? great- I er. A successful electric vehicle i suitable for volume ssles would | be as revolutionary a Itchnolog- iicai development fls dhj-lhlhg | seers before in America, I matched only by such products : as airplanes, telephones and ; computers. Al the present limn nnfU of the large electric equipment ! manufacturers have cipvelop- meni projects under way. and at least six small companies . now are selling vehicles that can travel 100 miles at 40 to 50 I miles an hour. th fact, the major, manufacturers of internal combustion engines also have been working on the project, although perhaps HELP! (Who wouldn't?) This blonde driver's HELP sign is really a littcrbag reminder to "Keep America Beautiful." When not being used as a distress signal, the white plastic bag is hung inside the car to hold trash that might otherwise become litter. Keep America Beautiful Inc., the national antilitter organization that supplied the container, reports U.S. taxpayers shell out some $500 million a year to pick up litter'from streets, highways, parks, beaches and other public places. a little" mote" quietly. Scores of battery-powered i transportation devices already i 1 exist: buses, industrial trucks, i • delivery vans, noiseless dairy) ; trucks, golf carls, SutornaUc i j trains. i ! A Southern California rfiaflU- i facturer has been making a lightweight, two-passenger electric car for six years. He sells. ! about 150 a year, mostly to eld- { erly and handicapped people,! who drive them about cityj streets. ! The spark behind develop- J ment of the electric car comes ] as ttiuch from the negative fac-1 inrs of noise and air pollution ' from gasoline driven vehicles,' as it does from the great poten-; tial market. ' 1 W.J. Clapp of the Kdisoni Slectric Institute, an organize-j .(ion ol electric utilities, con>j mented recently that one auto- j mobile traveling 30 miles at 60 j i miles an hour consumes more j breathable air in that time than i 100.000 people. j Clapp's viewpoint is perhaps | prejudiced, but the point re- 1 mains that many Americans are becoming deeply concerned with the air they breathe and t feel the aulomobile is one of the ! chief contributors to pollution, j The fact that (he electric car: has nol ypt met with more ac- i reptance is partially a tribute to the effective promotion of gaso-1 line driven cars by the big man- { ufaclurers. In England, for ex-1 ample, 80 per cent of the vehi- j cles used for door-to-door deliveries are electric. The obstacles are real, howev- j er. How do you pack enough j batteries into the car without! eliminating the driver's space j or increasing the weight to the i point of diminishing return? I Recharging is a problem also, j There are physical limits to the! rale at which balteries can be I charged. An experimental vehi- j cle being used by General Elec-; Iric, for example, requires eight hours to recharge. And there is another obstacle i also. It is habit. Although elec-! trie utilities are in Ihe door-lo- j door business as much as the j milkman or the mailman, few I utilities use anything but gasoline-driven vehicles. New Artificial Heart Device Developed by Cooley's Team NEW YORK ( AP) - Dr. Denton A. Cooley and his co-worker Dr. Domingo Liotta have developed a new artificial heart device that Cooley says will be kfept on standby for use when a' transplant is needed, but no hUman donor heart available. "Within six weeks," he said, "We will have tested the new- $st device." , Cooley rejected criticism of his use of another artificial Mart in Houston last April 4 on Haskel Karp, 47. Karp lived for 65 hours with the artificial heart before a donor could be found to supply a human heart. He died April 8, 38 hours after the h'uman-heart transplant. •f'Cooley (old a session of the annual convention of the 'American Medical Association meeting here Monday that Karp was "at the point of death." i "If you have a dead heart 1 and a live body and a live central nervous system," Cooley said, "I can see no moral ol> i jection to utilizing the artificial ; heart." i The use of the first device produced by Cooley and Liotta i touched off a heated controversy and prompted Dr. Michael De Bakey, a rival heart surgeon, to ask for an investigation to see if federal guidelines were violated. The original heart, Cooley | said, did not pump as strongly j after it was implanted in Karp ! as the surgical team wished. '< ''The output was somewhat ennedy Calls in Bankers New Round of Parleys ASHINGTON (AP) ~ Secre- the Treasury David M. is calling in a second bankers in his attempt nation's growing in- head off the possihi- interest rate in- jjedy announced the chief ffJ cers of 25 ma J° r been invited to meet ' Wednesday morning inflation anU related lauding the current of interest rates." the meeting would be similar lo Kennedy's | first session with the financial i leaders. He and federal Reserve I Board Chairman William Me. ! Chesney Martin Jr. met with • two dozen representatives of the i largest banks July 7. i The spokesman said the i Wednesday meeting probably I would complete Kennedy's talks ', with bankers. He has pledged to meet later with representatives of major corporations. The two groups of bankers, ' Treasury said, represent more ; than 50 per cent of the nation's total commercial bank deposits. A main purpose of the meetings has been to convince bankers—and the public—that the administration is serious about controlling inflation. marginal," he said. "We wanted to increase it, but it was working at the maximum. Cooley said he thought the marginal output may have contributed to Karp's eventual death after the transplant, although what he called "enthu- j siastic" drug therapy to prevent j rejection may have been more important in making Karp susceptible to the pneumonia, which was the principle cause i of death. I Cooley said in the new de-! vice, the chambers and pump-' ing mechanisms have been redesigned, with compression working from four directions instead of one, as in the original device. He said if a person's heart "died" during open heart surgery, it would justify the use of an artificial heart until a human heart was available. "The source of donors has temporarily dried up," Cooley i said, and cited the poor survival rates as the cause. But | the results worldwide on heart , transplants, he argued, are as i good as the early results with i kidney transplants. } "Now is the time," he said, "to do more cases rather than less." Cooley has performed 20 heart transplants in 19 patients. Two patients survive. One has lived ' eight months, the other two months, j "Even a few months survival justifies the effort," Cooley said. PRE-FINISH $269 and up •WBffiw^^" i^wsffSBBHPr JBP H»y Pb §«HS11 FAMILY CENTER 600 N. Center iron HOURS CHILTON ICE CUBE TRAYS Reg. 99e Value Nee WHIRL 'N SKIP Reg. 88c Price AQr W^V LAY-AWAY for Foil THERMAL BLANKETS Reg. 4.48 Value Sole Playtex Disposable DIAPERS 30 Ch Plus Free Panty Reg. 1.79 Value 1. Sale Price ALUMINUM 9-CUP Percolators Reg. 1.97 Value ,, 1.69 METAL ASHTRAYS Reg. 12c 5c Sale ea. A.M, re S6yi' and Men's SWIMMING TRUNKS JIANII Permanent Preis SUMMER SLACKS AM Siiei 2.00 :•' . Price LADIES' NYLON HOSE Reg. 1.49 for PLASTIC TUMBLERS Reg. 12c Each 3c STYROFOAM ICE BUCKET Reg. 34c Sale Price LADY LORA BOBBY PINS Reg. 1.29 List Price 39c LAY-AWAY NOW FOR SCHOOL PHARMACY SPECIALS GOOD TUESDAY THRU SATURDAY SUMMER SPECIAL DURING JULY and AUGUST THE J.R.B. DISCOUNT PHARMACY WILL GIVE DOUBLE S&H GREEN STAMPS WITH ALL PRESCRIPTIONS NEW OR OLD AND CONTINUE THEIR LOW, LOW PRICES. MAIL ORDERS FILLED PROMPTLY REG. 1.39 BorHe of 100 ANACIN TABLETS 88c Only wU V REG, 3,00 GERITOL Uquid er Tablet 197 Only M*Wi RIG. 1,29 Preparation H Ointment for himorrhgidj Only OOC REG. 1,59 CONTAC CAPSULES Cold» and Ha/fever Only OOC RIG. $,79 Bottle of 100 H.P.V, High Pottcuy Yit«f*in end Mineral Ttbltti 388 Only Iftifii RIG. 2,00 ESQTERICA BEACH CEiMi Only I«W7 ORDERS FILUO PROMPTLY Prices Good Tuesday July 15 and Wednesday July 16 SAVE THE STAMPS SPARE THE ft! GOLD Iftrf f«ir DWDM" LiAN AND TSNBIR P5RK STEAK t 69c 600GH OtBt VIRGINIA PORK SAUSAGE POrk ChOpS fhkk Center cul* Pork Ribs s ffl8 n »unn &&» ib. Franks A.F. i2-«. m Sliced Bacon A .F.n, OOOCH BLUB RIDBON Sliced Bologna i 2 . 0 *. Pk *. Corn Dogs A ,r, J.RJ. leef ii U.S. 66*6^^ In* speeted and §tade«J "Cheieii" If fef any reasen yau are nef idfiificd we will eh§effuHy refund yeur money. PORK m*4^ rvnrv 79c Roast Semi- BoHeelsi SflWU-RfcSH AMEhtCAN OR P Sliced Cheese , 2t ,t fcach Slice tVfap NABISCO etiip§*A*H6y er Pecan Cookies 14-6*. LA CHOY RIG. Chop Suey Brown Beouty Beans SHURMNE 303 Hamburger Pattifis Fkg. of in 2/35c MRS. WEAVER'S ASSORTED C I J SO FREE STAMPS ttMH dOiaas OF ANY 2 PROS. r 59c . All Meat rkg. of 4 . 49C Cream Pies Cream Style Golden 303 Can SUN RIPE • rUllQS 16-01. Cello Bog SKINNERS MACARONI OR Spaghetti B.O*. Bo * 43c SHURFINE WHITE Frosting Mixes is-o«. BOX 29c Apple Jelly i£«°. j.r 27c Vinegar r <ine . cidor 35c Pickles & FDil1 ' 47c 69C FrUlf PieS 69C Peppers 1 H Ch 33c IVIIf CAW 1$ A „> WINNER 11 $25,500,00 in cash prizes plus 44,539,000 S&H JSreen Stamps ta be given away at your ,RJ, ijSuper Mkts. in Brownwood, Brady, Abilene, Bangs, Crass Plains, Cisco, Eastland, Ranger De Leon, Colemon 45c 39e 306 . 5/$l 4/$1 PLUM ROSE Sliced Ham Rcs . 69cPk? 59c BAKERY ALL SNOWDRIFT SHORTENING 3-lb. Can UPTON'S '/4-lb. Pkg. MORTON'S FROZEN CREAM PIES Each Facial Tissues Voo"count 27c Syrup sT"" 1 '. Co " e 69c Liquid Detergent £" 2/89c Pure Cane Sugar 5-lb. Bag • S^^ mJf^\i7& Lipton'i Family size 12 Count MARSHMALLOWS VIENNA SAUSAGE PORK & BEANS ENGLISH PEAS CHARCOAL STOKILY'5 DRINKS Krafti Jet Puff 16 oz. Armour's 5-oi. Con . , Uncle Williami 300 Can Trellis 303 Can Arrow 10-lb. Bag Orange, Grape, Lemonade, Choc, 46-o*. Can 39c 19c 5/LOO 101.00 2/29c 59c 25c AN S&H DELICATESSEN GOOCH BLUE RIBBON BAR-B-Q German Ring Sausage M ...,99c Bar-B-O Beef Ribs'S^k ... 1-09 WITH POTATO SALAD, PICKLE AND OL>VE Roast Beef Sandwich „ 49c ,,. or a Timex, Bulova, Wittnauer. You not only get timepieces with our S&H Green Stamps, you save money. So don'l lose time in getting down to shop with us. COFFEE TO CO Oil EA r HERK Mix or Match Mix or Match Mix or Match Kraut ?££"'. Cut si/2 Can .. 3/$1 3/$l German Sausage Lunch With Beans and 89C Potato Salad f* • FROZEN F BKKF, TUBKEV, CHICKEN POT PI E5 Morton's 8-01 Shurfine All Grinds Mb. Can CAKE MIXES 59c Shurfine Box ... 4100 A10NTB Drinks A.F. SLK-T.O OB Peaches Beans 403 ca« 4/$1 TJSNPBBSHTPT CRUSHED Pineapple £ 4/$1 ORANOB JuictKTc,. 4/$l & Beans y an 2*4 Can . 3/$l 3/$l Wax Beans &'.4/$l Beans Juice 2J. 3 Can WHOLE Br^frc SUurflne P€vi5 NO. 3 c«n PeOS we™ 5/$l 1)81, MONTE WHOLE Nfc\V Potatoes S.F. GOLDEN 5/$l MEXICAN DINNERS 5/$1 39c DETERGENT fnergy Gienr . 49c 5/$1 . ^ 49c Can STVLJ5 5/$1 5/$l Nectarines SIIUJIFINB CR- STYHS FROZEN CORN „.., B.PEF. TUflKEV SHURFROST DINNERS ,,., A.F. FROZEN ROLLS 3i£u.59e DAIRY SHURFRESH OLEO «.* », 2/43e CORN OIL OLEO ^«*^K 33e A.F. BISCUITS .». ................. 3/25C J.R.B. ICE CREAM „„,.. .......... 59e YAMI YOGURT M !*»*«.» SUPER MARKETS IROWNWOOP, BANGS, CQUMAN, CROSS INS, ABIL^Nf, RANQfR, fASTUND, Of UON, BRAPY, WICHITA FAU5 NO SAUS TO Busing Plan Is Proposed For Houston j HOUSTON (AP) - vp in .11 jtHto white students 3ftd fO,fl&uj black students would b£ bused to achieve facial bjitefice ifl Houston schools uttdef a ptefi subnimed by the National As| Sociattofl of Colofed People. 1 The NAACf> introduced the S computerised formula in a fed-, ] eral court hearing Monday in ; I which the Justice Department ! is requesting for a new inte- i gratiori plan For the Houston Ini dependent School District. I The N'AACP and the goverfi- 1 menl Is flskifig Judge Sen. C. I Connaily to replace the freedom ! of choice plan now used, which j Connaily ordered the district lo' j implement in 1967. \ I the government charges that; ! only token integration has been j i achieved under it. > j The plan has resulted in 81.7 ! pfer cent of the Negro pupils attending schools thai are 95 per cent Negro, il said. The Houston district has 231 schools and 250.000 students. The busing plan submitted is one of the new methods used by the NAACP in accumulate teeis and figures and arrive at' solutions The o'gattizallnn' hired a Massachusetts data pro- i cessing ^rm to come up wilh the best inlegration plan for the ! district. ' Joe Reynolds, school board attorney, attacked the feasibility, of the busing plan and the es-' timaled $1.1 million cost figure! gi-'en by the NAACP. The transportation would run ) about $3 million, Reynolds said.! j and the plan would not take into ' account pupils who remain at the school for extracurricular activities. ' SPECIAL DELIVERY of a very important Item. A Marine helicopter return* a 105mm howitzer to iti mountain'top fire tupport base In the northern reaches of Vietnam after its repair in Dong Ha. Because fire support bases are accessible only by helicopter, artillery pieces must be flown back to rear areas for repairs. REPORTS PSYCH/ATR/ST Activity Among Elderly To Show Big Increase in Future By FRANK CAREY i AP Science Writer j NEW YORK (AP) - A Duke! University psychiatrist says it is j quite possible that sexual activi- j ty among elderly persons will : show a definite increase in the j future. j The ability for sexual activity i among the elderly is already ap-: i preciable at ages even beyond i 75, Dr. Ewald W. Busse said to- [ ! day in a report to a symposium, i i "Physical Fitness and Aging," i at the annual convention of the i American Medical Association. | i "Assuming that the health of | j the elderly will continue to im; prove, and assuming that neu-' i rotic sexual conflicts will be less ' j prevalent, it is quite possible I j that sexual activity among the j elderly in the years ahead will | show a definite increase," j Busse said. " ; He led up to his forecast by saying the situation at present is this: • • 1. In general, sexual activity' between marital partners tends to be maintained until after the age of 75. I 2. Approximately 60 per cent • 11 of married couples between the j 11 ages of 60 and 74 years of age i ' | remain sexually active. j Duke's Song Inspired by Apollo Shot NEW YORK (AP) - Musician Duke Ellington says he is going to start and end his singing career with a self-composed song inspired bv the forthcoming flight of Apollo 11. It's entitled "Moon Maiden." Recorded by the 70-year-old bandleader here Monday, the song will be broadcast for the first time at 10 p.m. Sunday, when .astronauts Edwin Aldrm and Neil Armstrong are expected. to be resting on the lunar surface. "JtYa one-shot thing," Ellington saj<j. "This is the end of my singing career." All Ellington observation on the Apollo 111 moonshot itself; "1 hope they will come back and say it's a very nice place to spend the 3. After age 75, sexual activity declines, so as to include only 30 per cent of married couples that age. But, he said, the continuation of sexual activity is dependent upon several interacting factors, adding: "Among the married, the physical and mental health of the partner is important—as are the patterns of sexual interest and activity that have been established in early adulthood. At the same session. Dr. Lawrence E. Lamb of Baylor College of Medicine Houston, Tex. —one of the world's pioneering centers in heart transplant research—criticized "the theatrics of artificial hearts and transplants." "While a few surgeons make headlines with human experimentation," he said, "the real battle against disease, death and debility is being waged in the unglamorous area of preventing heart disease . . . "if the money spent on the artificial heart was spent on really launching a preventive program, thousands of lives could be saved." Dr. Lamb named no names in saying that "artificial hearts an'd heart transplants ... have produced an abundance of headlines and little else other than notoriety for a few surgeons." But he is on the staff of the same medical school as Dr. { Denton A. Cooley, who holds the j world's record for the number I of heart transplant operations. ] Cooley was also on the AMA j convention program. He dis- ! closed in an interview Monday i that he and an associate have 1 developed a new and apparently improved artificial heart device, and that it should be ready for use within six weeks. About 22.500 doctors are attending the five-day convention. , The AMA says it represents • about 66 per cent of Ihe nation's 325,000 doctors. Queen's Contest Due With Rodeo STEPHENVILLE - Stephenville Kiwanis Club is sponsoring a queen's contest for out-of-town girls residing more than 10 miles from the city in conjunction with the annual Stephenville Rodeo this Thursday through Saturday. There will be two divisions— sub-teen for ages 9-13 and teen for ages 14-18. A scholarship lo Tarleton State College will be awarded the senior division winner with an appropriate award to the junior division winner. Judge 7e//s Clay to Appear July 24 for Resenfenc/ng HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) - A federal judge rejected Cassius Clay's appeal to set aside his draft evasion conviction and ordered him to appear July 24 for resentenciog. Judge Joe Ingraham refused to set aside the 1967 jury verdict after the defense claimed wire tapped information used in the trial was illegally obtained and had tainted the conviction. In Atlanta, defense attorney Charles Morgan Sr,, said he would, not comment until he's read the ruling. "The electronic eavesdropping questions are appealable to the Fifth Circuit (Court of Appeals in New Orleans) and from there to the Supreme Court," he said- Four wiretap conversations were submitted into evidence in a June hearing. A fifth was not allowed because Ingraham said it could endanger the national security if revealed SEN-DINT* o EXPRESS Call EXPRESS § for Fr*t •in *t« rw The Supreme Court had ordered the hearing to determine if Clay's conviction was influenced by the information from the electronic surveillance. Clay had appealed his eor> viction, and maximum sentence of five years imprisonment and 10,000 fine on these gro$unds. Jngraham also rejected Clay's request for a full scale hearing into practices by the FBI, who monitored his conversations. Ingraham noted that the conversation between Clay and Or. Martin UHher King, Jr. quoted Clay as advising the civil rights leader to be careful of "them whities," The judge said this had no effect on the Justice department rejection of Clay's claim lor draft exemption as * wnscieijticws objector. "The ccapmqn slang referewa was not within a context which could, have had, any bearing on the defendant's belief." logt'8* htm ssid. "A Negro not a member of the natiori of Islam would b» f s likely to say the thing. 11 CJJjy haji also sought Mu&Um to